European Network for Optimization of Veterinary Antimicrobial Therapy (ENOVAT) guidelines for antimicrobial use in canine acute diarrhoea

Acute diarrhoea is a common presentation in dogs, and a common reason for antimicrobial prescription and nutraceutical use. This evidence-based guideline provides recommendations for antimicrobial and probiotic treatment of canine acute diarrhoea (CAD). A multidisciplinary panel developed the recomm...

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Veröffentlicht in:The veterinary journal (1997) 2024-10, Vol.307, p.106208, Article 106208
Hauptverfasser: Jessen, L.R., Werner, M., Singleton, D., Prior, C., Foroutan, F., Ferran, A.A., Arenas, C., R. Bjørnvad, C., Lavy, E., Allerton, F., Allensbach, K., Guardabassi, L., Unterer, S., Bodnárová, T., Windahl, U., Brennan, M.L., Weese, J.S., Scahill, K.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Acute diarrhoea is a common presentation in dogs, and a common reason for antimicrobial prescription and nutraceutical use. This evidence-based guideline provides recommendations for antimicrobial and probiotic treatment of canine acute diarrhoea (CAD). A multidisciplinary panel developed the recommendations by adhering to the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) framework. The opinions of stakeholders (general veterinary practitioners and dog owners) were collected and incorporated to ensure the applicability of this guideline. Four strong recommendations informed by high certainty evidence, and three conditional recommendations informed by very low or low certainty evidence, were drafted by the panel, along with an ungraded section on diagnostic work-up of dogs with acute diarrhoea. The ENOVAT guidelines initiative encourages national or regional guideline makers to use the evidence presented in this document, and the supporting systematic review, to draft national or local guidance documents. •Evidence-based guidelines using the GRADE methodology.•The panel recommends strongly against use of antimicrobials in dogs with mild disease.•The panel recommends strongly against use of antimicrobials in dogs with moderate disease.•The panel suggests systemic antimicrobials in dogs with severe disease.•Antimicrobial therapy should not extend beyond clinical resolution.
ISSN:1090-0233
1532-2971
1532-2971
DOI:10.1016/j.tvjl.2024.106208